Implications of DTI in mild traumatic brain injury for detecting neurological recovery and predicting long-term behavioural outcome in paediatric and young population—a systematic review

  Purpose This systematic review was done with the aim to answer these three questions: 1) Is there any change in diffusion metrics in MRI-DTI sequences after mild traumatic brain injury in paediatric and young population?, 2) Is there any correlation of these changes in diffusion metrics with sever...

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Veröffentlicht in:Child's nervous system 2021-08, Vol.37 (8), p.2475-2486
Hauptverfasser: Jain, Banesh, Das, Anand Kumar, Agrawal, Manish, Babal, Rohit, Purohit, Devendra Kumar
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container_end_page 2486
container_issue 8
container_start_page 2475
container_title Child's nervous system
container_volume 37
creator Jain, Banesh
Das, Anand Kumar
Agrawal, Manish
Babal, Rohit
Purohit, Devendra Kumar
description   Purpose This systematic review was done with the aim to answer these three questions: 1) Is there any change in diffusion metrics in MRI-DTI sequences after mild traumatic brain injury in paediatric and young population?, 2) Is there any correlation of these changes in diffusion metrics with severity of post concussion symptoms?, 3) Is the change in diffusion metrics predictive of neurocognitive function or neurological recovery? Material and Methods Eligibility criteria- Mild TBI patients upto 22 years of age, MRI- DTI sequence done post injury, Outcome measurement with follow up at least for onemonth and articles published in English language only. Data sources- PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Scopus and Cochrane Results Some studies show increased FA and some studies show decrease FA and few showed no change in white matter microstructure in mTBI patients and this depends on the duration of injury. Prediction of PCSs severity on the basis of changes in white matter microstructure showed inconsistent results. Radiological recovery in contrast to clinical recovery, is often delayed ranging from 6 months to 2-3 years. But change in diffusion metrics after mTBI is not definite predictive of neurocognitive outcomes. Conclusion Large, properly designed, multicentric studies with appropriate extracranial or orthopedic control and long follow up are needed to establish the use of DTIin mTBI for predicting behavioral outcome.
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Material and Methods Eligibility criteria- Mild TBI patients upto 22 years of age, MRI- DTI sequence done post injury, Outcome measurement with follow up at least for onemonth and articles published in English language only. Data sources- PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Scopus and Cochrane Results Some studies show increased FA and some studies show decrease FA and few showed no change in white matter microstructure in mTBI patients and this depends on the duration of injury. Prediction of PCSs severity on the basis of changes in white matter microstructure showed inconsistent results. Radiological recovery in contrast to clinical recovery, is often delayed ranging from 6 months to 2-3 years. But change in diffusion metrics after mTBI is not definite predictive of neurocognitive outcomes. 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Material and Methods Eligibility criteria- Mild TBI patients upto 22 years of age, MRI- DTI sequence done post injury, Outcome measurement with follow up at least for onemonth and articles published in English language only. Data sources- PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, Scopus and Cochrane Results Some studies show increased FA and some studies show decrease FA and few showed no change in white matter microstructure in mTBI patients and this depends on the duration of injury. Prediction of PCSs severity on the basis of changes in white matter microstructure showed inconsistent results. Radiological recovery in contrast to clinical recovery, is often delayed ranging from 6 months to 2-3 years. But change in diffusion metrics after mTBI is not definite predictive of neurocognitive outcomes. 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Neurosciences
Neurosurgery
Review Article
title Implications of DTI in mild traumatic brain injury for detecting neurological recovery and predicting long-term behavioural outcome in paediatric and young population—a systematic review
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